Uncle Eddie's E-mail -- March
4
Saint Casimir of Poland,
(entered heaven in 1848)
Dear Chuck,
It sounds to me like you have begun your spring vacation too early.
Reliable sources have informed me of your growing laxity – spending more time playing backgammon
than perusing textbooks (plus your obsession to that positively addicting pastime of disc golf –
would that you had gone to college farther north, where winter would have corralled such
frivolities) is no way to get ready for your life’s mission. You should be focusing your
efforts during these formative years on laying the groundwork for holiness, not pampering your
tendencies to self-indulgence. Maybe you need to reflect on the example of young men who have
used their educational opportunities wisely. Take today’s saint for
example.
Casimir was one of the 13 thirteen children whom
Elizabeth of Austria bore to her husband, King Casimir IV of Poland. He and his two brothers
had the privilege of receiving their education at the able hands of John Dlugosz, a holy and
brilliant cleric from Krakow. Early on, St Casimir tempered the ease and comfort of court life
by making little sacrifices – like wearing an uncomfortable hair shirt under his princely robes, or
sleeping on the floor sometimes, or spending his free time visiting the poor and the sick… Anything
he could do to make sure that the comforts and privileges of his state didn’t soften up his
willpower. It paid off. When Casimir was about 15 (that’s the age when noblemen finished
their education back then), some Hungarian noblemen connived with his father (King of Poland,
remember) to topple their king. The young saint was implicated in the plot: he was sent at the
head of the Polish army to forcefully remove the unwanted leader. Before the armies engaged,
however, Casimir became convinced that the war was unjust, and circumstances allowed him an
opportunity to abandon his mission. Later, word was received from the Pope condemning the
attempted coup and vindicating the young prince’s decision. Nevertheless, his father was
furious, and had him imprisoned in a dreary castle for three months as punishment. Afterwards,
he returned to court, but continued rejecting these petty conflicts (which only contributed to the
Turkish advance into Europe). He also continued his life of prayer and study, and didn’t let
up on his personal austerities. These aggravated a congenital lung condition, and he died at
the young age of 23. Polish pilgrims flocked to his tomb, where miracles began occurring
through his intercession almost immediately. Forever after his countrymen have called him, “St
Casimir the Peace Maker.”
I am not wishing upon you an
early grave (although I would prefer that than a long life of scandal and debauchery), but I would
say that you may need to make a visit to our Lord in the Eucharist, so you can talk with him about
how to recover a balance between hobbies and duties. In the meantime, count on my
prayers.
Your loving uncle,
Eddy
To read more about other Saints of the day CLICK HERE
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